THIS BLOG OPPOSES DRACONIAN LAWS & POLITICAL SCAPEGOATING BY SOME POLITICIANS! * THE PUNISHMENT IS THE CRIME * FOR A WORLD WITHOUT VIOLENCE * WHERE DOES THAT COME FROM? * A) DALAI LAMA: "LOVE, PEACE AND KINDNESS YOU CAN'T BREAK IT." * B) FREDERICK NIETZSCHE: "LOVE YOUR ENEMY." * THERE IS ALSO FORGIVENESS BUT YOU DON'T GET THE COMPLETE PROTECTION UNLESS YOU ACCEPT BOTH OF THE A & B CONDITIONS * & FOR THAT YOU MUST COME TO TERMS WITH C) FORGIVENESS * :-)

Friday, 8 August 2008

Australian complicity in War Crimes in the Middle East, Torture, Rendition. In Australia Draconian Laws, Indefinite Solitary Confinement of prisoners at places like the HRMU at Goulburn Correctional Centre.

The Federal Government is moving to ratify an optional protocol to the United Nations Convention Against Torture and is also considering bringing in legislation to formally outlaw it in Australia.

Attorney-General Robert McClelland has said that the Government also considers the controversial practice of waterboarding as a method of torture.

[People also consider complicity in US war crimes, torture, rendition and war crimes in the Middle East and Indefinite solitary confinement and draconian laws here in Australia as controversial practices.

The Government is consulting with the states about signing up to the optional protocol, which means UN inspectors could visit Australian detention facilities.

Mr McClelland says the move signifies that the Government is re-engaging with the international community.

"I think the United Nations will appreciate it's more than a gesture," he said.

"It's significant. It helps to facilitate and give credibility to the international human rights framework.

"It's quite hypocritical for a modern and advanced nation to call upon neighbouring countries to lift their standards in a number of human rights areas if we aren't prepared to set our own example."

While Mr McClelland admits there are already laws against assault and detention which protect Australians against torture, he says there are still benefits to enacting a specific domestic law.

[Yes well, the fact that there are no laws against 'indefinite solitary confinement' and detention in Australia which actually don't protect Australians against torture!!! Why isn't that defined as torture? Because it's the new form of torture in Australia's New World Order. You see assault leaves marks on the body but psychological torture is hidden to the general public but inflicted on those being tortured right now!. What about draconian laws?]

McClelland: "The international body that monitors the convention thinks it is desirable where countries can specifically state and declare a specific offence of torture and that's what we're also exploring and canvassing the views of the states about," he said.

Mr McClelland says the practice of waterboarding is "unquestionably" torture but would not specify if Australia's latest move was aimed at putting pressure on the US to outlaw it.

"We would like to think that the greater number of countries that sign up to these international human rights standards and adhere to them sets an example for all other countries without specifically identifying any country," he said.

Waterboarding, where water is repeatedly poured over a person's face, has been used by the US as an interrogation method.

Australia is already a party to the UN Convention Against Torture which requires signatories to take steps to prevent torture inside their borders.

But the Howard government had refused to ratify the optional protocol to the Convention which sets up a system for international inspections of member countries' prisons and detention centres.

Quote: McClelland made the US and waterboaring his prime argument but why not look further in his own backyard? Because that appears to let him and his government, in some part, as well as the late Howard government, off the hook? Accept for the compliant and complicit war crimes, torture of prisoners in the Middle East, Guantanamo Bay, Abu Grahib and turning a blind eye to rendition etc. There are issues here in Australia like indefinite solitary confinement in prisons and draconian laws amongst other things....Like not sending war criminals like ex prime minister John Howard and his cronies like ex Federal Attorney General Phillip Ruddock to the Hague War Criminal Court.

But having said that, people shouldn't think that It's quite hypocritical like, Attorney-General Robert McClelland said, for a modern and advanced nation like Australia to call upon neighbouring countries like the US, Canada, Britain, Israel, China, Russia, France, Pakistan, India, etc.. To lift their standards in a number of human rights areas if we have been kinder, in some respects to most of our citizenry lately, than they're. Things like the Death Penalty, Genocide, Water boarding, Rendition, Terror, False Flag Ops, Propaganda, War on Witches, State-Terror, Selling Human Body Parts of Executed Prisoners, Occupation of Sovereign Nation States, Pre-emptive Strikes on Sovereign Nation States, No Freedom After Speech, Killing Their Opposition Political Party Leaders and Media, Inhibiting or Killing Freedom of the Press, Inhibiting Internet Freedom, Conspiracy Theories, and Govenment Propaganda by Corporate Media etc...

The president of the Australian Council for Civil Liberties Terry O'Gorman called on the Federal Government to make good its stance against torture by pushing the states to introduce stricter rules on the use of Tasers by police.

Tasers are electronic stun guns used to paralyse their targets. They are used by police in New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia.

Mr O'Gorman said Tasers were extremely painful and could cause death and were being used too readily by police.

"The United Nations have said that it is a form of torture so the Federal Government has got to grab this whole issue with both hands and address the widespread, growing use of tasers in at least three of the eight state and territory police services in this country," he said.

Australia is already a party to the UN Convention Against Torture which requires signatories to take steps to prevent torture inside their borders.

But the Howard government had refused to ratify the optional protocol to the Convention which sets up a system for international inspections of member countries' prisons and detention centres.

Robert McClelland says he is consulting with the state and territory governments about whether it should be ratified, and expects to release his opinion in the next few months.

Mr McClelland says it would depend on how the Tasers were used.

"Clearly if a Taser is used as an alternative to shooting someone dead then that is one thing, if on the other hand a Taser was used to repeatedly fire into someone for purpose of eliciting information then obviously that's a different situation," he said.

But the UN's Committee Against Torture has said that they can cause acute pain amounting to a form of torture.

Quote: What if Tazers were used against prisoners, detainees, demonstrators, protestors, dissent, public nuisances, pests, drunks, intolerance, unpopular people, homeless and the mentally ill, instead of just using dialogue or keeping them quiet by other means? Then the argument that the only use of a Tazer as an alternative to shooting a person dead is not true like McClelland says and that wouldn't sway the 150 dead in the US or those who would subsequently be killed in Australia. So there is a definite need to introduce stricter rules on the use of Tasers by police or prison guards if they're intent on using them at all. Tasers are a Lethal Meme.

“Officers at Long Bay Prison Complex are on total strike at the removal of their positions in the Long Bay Prison Hospital. This means that Justice Minister Hatzistergos has the whole Long Bay prison community in crisis due to his callous attempt to cut costs and remove 28 prison officer positions on April 2” said Justice Action spokesperson Brett Collins.

The loss of those positions led to the permanent 18 hour solitary confinement of mental patients. The whole mental health profession nationally, other authorities, teachers and patients have called for its reversal, ” said Justice Action spokesperson Michael Poynder.

The strike began last Tuesday, and is likely to continue over the weekend.

“The effect on the patients has been horrific. Service providers have expressed horror at this latest escalation. Normally such vulnerable people would be exempt from industrial action. This total isolation in single cells for mentally ill people amounts to torture and will cause immense damage,” said Mr Collins.

“This out of control crisis means that Premier Iemma can no longer abandon responsibility to his minister. He gave assurances to Parliament as Health Minister in 2004 that oblige him to intervene. We call for him to accept judicial control of the area as is adopted by the US in such a situation, and to grant an immediate visit to the patients from their families and community support” said Mr Collins.

Related:Doctor urges mandatory detention inquiryA psychiatrist who has treated immigration detainees says former government ministers should be called to account for the policy of mandatory detention.

UN Torture Committee Blasts AustraliaIn its report on Australia, the Torture Committee was critical of Australia's prisons, counter-terrorism laws, mandatory immigration detention and of the way Australian officials have ignored torture and mistreatment overseas in places like Abu Ghraib.

LINE IN SAND ON MENTAL HEALTH“Patients under state control have had their social interaction reduced, and right to smoke removed. These vulnerable and isolated citizens, to whom the state owes a special obligation, are extremely distressed and have asked for community assistance,” said JA spokesperson Michael Poynder.

International Conference on Penal AbolitionThe full agenda for ICOPA is now online, and pending any further changes, the line-up is looking like we're going to have a fascinating conference. With speakers coming to present papers from Brazil, Trinidad, Canada, Australia, USA, Belgium, Argentina, South Africa plus many more including the UK, we are really looking at a truly international conference.

We owe prisoners more than jailPrisons are too important to be left to jailers, for the simple reason that the standard prison magnifies social problems. It is a congregation of people with an accumu–lation of risk factors for crime.Haneef inquiry could be waste of time and money: lawyerThe lawyer for former Gold Coast [scapegoat] terrorism suspect Dr Mohamed Haneef says he is worried a Government-ordered inquiry into the case will be a waste of time and money.

Push for overhaul of laws on terrorismAnti-terrorism laws are just 'state sanctioned terrorism' aimed at 'innocent people' and using them as 'scapegoats' for Australia's 'alleged war on terror'. These laws were meant to project 'fear' in the community that we somehow need to be protected so that the government can wage war on innocent people for resources around the world unchallenged.

Habib mistreated but not in Aussie embassyThere was little doubt that Mamdouh Habib was badly mistreated after he was detained by Pakistani and US authorities in the wake of the September 11 attacks and no doubt whatsoever that he was taken to Egypt against his will, a Federal Court judge has found.

Solitary Confinement: Mental illness in prisonsIt is well established that sensory deprivation can produce major psychological effects on humans including perceptual distortions, visual, auditory, and olfactory illusions, vivid fantasies often accompanied by striking hallucinations, derealization experiences, and hyper- responsivity to external stimuli.